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Brazil Moves to Ban Stablecoins Not Backed by Real-World Assets

by Terron Gold
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Brazil’s government and financial regulators have proposed a sweeping new policy that would ban the issuance and circulation of stablecoins not backed by real-world assets denominated in Brazilian reais, signaling a significant tightening of digital asset rules in the country’s fast-growing crypto market. (cryptotimes.io)

Ban Targets Crypto Stablecoins Without Reais Backing

Under the proposed law, only stablecoins backed by Brazilian currency or real-world assets denominated in reais — such as government securities, high-grade corporate bonds or cash equivalents — would be allowed to operate legally. Any foreign stablecoin or crypto-linked token claiming to be pegged to the Brazilian real without true backing in eligible assets could be prohibited from issuance, exchange listings and payments use. (cryptotimes.io)

Authorities say the measure is designed to safeguard financial stability, protect consumers and preserve monetary sovereignty by ensuring that any digital representation of the real is fully backed and regulated — eliminating the risks posed by algorithmic or offshore stablecoins with tenuous reserves. (cryptotimes.io)

What Would Be Affected

The draft regulation would affect:

  • Foreign or global stablecoins that claim a peso or dollar peg but are widely traded within Brazil.

  • Crypto projects issuing non-real-backed assets inside Brazil.

  • Digital wallets and exchanges that support unbacked stablecoins or INR-pegged crypto tokens.

Only stablecoins that are fully collateralized with reais or equivalent real-denominated real-world assets — with demonstrable and auditable reserves — would be permitted to operate and be used in domestic payments, trading and custody services. (cryptotimes.io)

Government Rationale: Stability and Sovereignty

Brazil’s central bank and finance ministry framed the proposal as a proactive move to prevent systemic risk, emphasizing that unbacked or loosely collateralized stablecoins can expose users to sudden de-pegging and reserve opacity. Regulators also said a strong stablecoin framework would protect the integrity of the financial system and ensure that cryptocurrency innovations complement — rather than undermine — established monetary policy. (cryptotimes.io)

Officials noted that stablecoins denominated in Brazilian reais — if backed with government-approved assets — could serve legitimate transactional uses such as cross-border remittances, merchant payments and programmable money features, but those must meet rigorous reserve, audit and disclosure standards before issuance. (cryptotimes.io)

Industry Reaction

The proposal drew strong reactions from Brazil’s crypto community and exchanges, many of which warned that a blanket ban on unbacked stablecoins could reduce liquidity, limit access to crypto markets and push traders toward offshore platforms. Some stakeholders argued that stablecoins like USDC or USDT, though not backed by reais, are widely used in Brazil’s crypto ecosystem and serve as essential liquidity bridges for users trading Bitcoin, Ether and other assets. (cryptotimes.io)

Crypto advocates also urged regulators to harmonize stablecoin rules with transparent reserve audits and fraud protections rather than outright bans, saying that clarity and compliance frameworks could support innovation while reducing risk. (cryptotimes.io)

Next Steps

The ban is currently in draft regulatory form and must progress through Brazil’s legislative and regulatory process, including public consultation, central bank review and approval by the National Monetary Council before taking effect. If adopted, it could make Brazil one of the strictest regulators of stablecoins tied to fiat money in Latin America — with broad implications for how digital assets are traded and used in the region.

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